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Able Danger (What the 9/11 Commission Never Told You)
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$32.99
| Expected release date is Sep 8th 2026 |
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Product Details
Author:
Curt Weldon
Format:
Hardcover
Pages:
288
Publisher:
Skyhorse Publishing (September 8, 2026)
Imprint:
Tucker Carlson Books
Release Date:
September 8, 2026
Language:
English
Audience:
General/trade
ISBN-13:
9781683585565
ISBN-10:
1683585569
Weight:
16.96oz
Dimensions:
6" x 9"
File:
Eloquence-SimonSchuster_06032026_P10165203_onix30-20260603.xml
Folder:
Eloquence
List Price:
$32.99
Pub Discount:
65
Case Pack:
20
As low as:
$25.40
Publisher Identifier:
P-SS
Discount Code:
A
Overview
The Warning Before 9/11 and the Intelligence They Buried
For more than two decades, one question has haunted the story of September 11: what if elements inside the United States government knew more than they admitted before the attacks occurred?
In Able Danger: What the 9/11 Commission Never Told You, former Congressman Curt Weldon presents a deeply personal and explosive account of a classified U.S. Army intelligence program that identified Mohammed Atta and elements of the Al Qaeda network operating inside the United States more than a year before 9/11—and of the institutional decisions that prevented that information from reaching the FBI.
Drawing on decades of firsthand involvement, Weldon reconstructs the rise and suppression of the Able Danger program through sworn affidavits, congressional letters, classified briefings, unpublished oral histories, and testimony from military officers, intelligence officials, and senior government figures. At the center of the book is a disturbing allegation: that critical intelligence was buried not by foreign enemies, but by bureaucratic fear, political calculation, and institutional self-protection across multiple administrations.
Unlike previous accounts, Able Danger is not written by an outsider theorizing from a distance. Weldon was a senior member of Congress with top security clearances who spent years pressing both Republican and Democratic administrations for answers. He also experienced the tragedy of 9/11 personally, through close relationships with firefighters and first responders who died in the attacks.
The result is both a political investigation and a human story of warning ignored, testimony suppressed, and accountability deferred. Challenging the omissions of the official 9/11 Commission Report, the book argues that some of the most consequential facts surrounding the attacks were excluded from public view.
Provocative, meticulously documented, and emotionally charged, Able Danger asks readers to confront a troubling possibility: not whether America was attacked without warning, but whether the warning itself was deliberately silenced.
For more than two decades, one question has haunted the story of September 11: what if elements inside the United States government knew more than they admitted before the attacks occurred?
In Able Danger: What the 9/11 Commission Never Told You, former Congressman Curt Weldon presents a deeply personal and explosive account of a classified U.S. Army intelligence program that identified Mohammed Atta and elements of the Al Qaeda network operating inside the United States more than a year before 9/11—and of the institutional decisions that prevented that information from reaching the FBI.
Drawing on decades of firsthand involvement, Weldon reconstructs the rise and suppression of the Able Danger program through sworn affidavits, congressional letters, classified briefings, unpublished oral histories, and testimony from military officers, intelligence officials, and senior government figures. At the center of the book is a disturbing allegation: that critical intelligence was buried not by foreign enemies, but by bureaucratic fear, political calculation, and institutional self-protection across multiple administrations.
Unlike previous accounts, Able Danger is not written by an outsider theorizing from a distance. Weldon was a senior member of Congress with top security clearances who spent years pressing both Republican and Democratic administrations for answers. He also experienced the tragedy of 9/11 personally, through close relationships with firefighters and first responders who died in the attacks.
The result is both a political investigation and a human story of warning ignored, testimony suppressed, and accountability deferred. Challenging the omissions of the official 9/11 Commission Report, the book argues that some of the most consequential facts surrounding the attacks were excluded from public view.
Provocative, meticulously documented, and emotionally charged, Able Danger asks readers to confront a troubling possibility: not whether America was attacked without warning, but whether the warning itself was deliberately silenced.









